The Spiritual Meaning
of Fasting
by
Carlos Alonso Vargas
When people talk about fasting these days, it
is most common to focus on what we might call
its “social” or “horizontal” dimension: it is
said that fasting finds its meaning in giving
to the poor the food that one didn’t eat when
fasting (or the monetary equivalent of such
food.) Therefore, we deprive ourselves of food
in order to share it with the needy.
That is, without a doubt, a praiseworthy
expression and justification for fasting. It
encourages us to share our material goods with
those who regularly need them, when we
regularly have them. Moreover, it brings us to
a true solidarity with them: by not eating, we
experience “in our own flesh” (literally) what
they commonly experience because of their
destitution.
Not only is it good to regard fasting in this
way, but it has a clear foundation even in the
Old Testament. In Isaiah 58:3-12 (especially
vv. 6-10) the Lord rebukes those who fast
while exploiting their laborers, and states
what true fasting is, the fast that is
pleasing to him – releasing the captives,
being kind to the needy, not exercising brute
force. I must clarify, however, that the point
of this passage is not so much that we should
give to the poor the food that we don’t eat or
the money we don’t use, but that our life
ought to be consistent. In order for fasting
to be pleasing to God, it must go together
with a righteous life, a life in which we
treat others fairly and do not take advantage
of them, and in which we share our goods and
help the needy. If, on the other hand, we are
unfair and selfish, our fasting and other
religious practices will be something merely
external which is worthless before God.
Even some Fathers of the Church, (1) in the
early centuries of Christianity explicitly
mention this practice of giving to the poor
the food that we give up when fasting. And it
has been a part of all of the major streams of
Christianity throughout the centuries.
It seems, however, that in modern times there
is a tendency to emphasize exclusively this
“social” aspect of fasting, which, even if it
has solid foundations in both the Jewish and
the Christian traditions, does not exhaust the
meaning of fasting. This social dimension is
so strongly emphasized today that it seems as
if other dimensions, which also give value and
meaning to the practice of fasting, have been
forgotten or set aside.
In Catholic tradition (I speak of it because
it’s the tradition I know best) there is also
a certain tendency to view fasting as a
“sacrifice” understood as “deprivation.” This
also has its foundations (which I will refer
to further on,) but it is easily distorted
into a “commercial” relationship: people have
a tendency to think that depriving yourself of
things “earns you points” before God. This
matches a wrong way of understanding what
“sacrifice” means – it is not necessarily a
negation or deprivation, but rather an offering,
a gift given to God to worship him and
recognize his lordship.
People also highlight the practical reality
that when we are fasting we have more time
available for prayer. This is true, and it is
also true that it is very advisable to turn to
prayer during the times one would normally be
eating. It is also true – as we will see
further on – that fasting and prayer are
closely related to each other. But that does
not mean that this is the reason for
fasting, or that it completely explains the
practice of fasting and gives it meaning. That
would be like saying that Christian fasting is
for losing weight – it is true that if you
fast you may lose weight, but this will be a
by-product of the fast, not its main
objective. (If that were the main objective,
then we can no longer refer to it as Christian
fasting nor to fasting as a religious
practice.)
Background in Scripture and
in Christian Tradition
In the Old Testament we find that fasting is
practiced mainly with two purposes: “to
afflict the soul” and “to seek the face of the
Lord.” By “afflicting the soul,” the Old
Testament mainly refers to breaking our own
pride: by depriving yourself of food, we are
no longer satisfied and don’t have anything to
boast about. We are in a kind of mourning.
Meanwhile, “seeking the face of the Lord”
refers to engaging into a personal
relationship with God, characterized by
righteousness and obedience to his
commandments.
As for Christians, we know for sure that
fasting was practiced from the very beginning;
this is indicated in the New Testament (Mt
6:16; 9:15; Acts 13:3; 14:23; 27:9; 1 Cor 7:5)
and it is clearly stated in the Didache
(2) and other ancient writings. But the
so-called “Desert Fathers” (pioneers of the
monastic movement in the deserts of Egypt,
Syria and Palestine, from the 4th century on)
were the first ones to state at least two very
clear purposes for fasting – communion with
God and Christian growth. For them, fasting is
one of the main means for fighting against
the passions – that is, acquiring
self-control, and fighting against temptation
– and also a form of spiritual warfare
against the enemy.
Dimensions of the spiritual
meaning of fasting
When speaking about the “spiritual” meaning we
are referring directly to what relates to our
personal relationship with God, our
Christian growth and our lives of holiness,
which include, of course, every aspect of our
lives. This is a relationship of communion
with God in the Holy Spirit, and
hence we call it “spiritual.” Thus, we are not
in any way using the word “spiritual” in
dualistic terms, as it is commonly understood
among the followers of esoteric or occult
schools, where it is opposed to the
“material,” which is considered as evil – or
at least inferior to the unseen.
On the contrary: as we shall see, precisely
because Christianity is not dualistic but
considers the human being as a unified entity,
something material like fasting (which is a
practice directly related to our body, our
matter) has its implications for and effects
in our spiritual life. So, what gives fasting
a spiritual meaning?
1. Fasting
as “seeking the face of the
Lord”
Fasting is something whose physical effects,
especially after a few hours, we can feel,
experience or perceive: this sensation,
perhaps not always of true hunger, but at
least a “desire to eat,” helps us remember –
whether we want to or not – that we are
fasting. And if we remember that we are
fasting, we will immediately remember why
we are fasting. We could then direct all of
our attention to ourselves (what are we
feeling, how much we think we need food…) or
if we truly are serious as Christians, it
won’t be hard to instead direct our attention
towards God, because, regardless of the
purpose of that specific fast, we are
ultimately doing it for God’s sake
and for the sake of our relationship with him.
This is why fasting has been traditionally
understood as a means of “penitence,” that is,
of conversion to God, of personally turning
back to him. Fasting, then, as prayer,
is a means for what the Old Testament calls
“seeking the face of the Lord,” that is to
say, relating personally to him, being in his
presence, seeking intimacy with him. This is
clearly seen when, in a day of fasting, we
devote ourselves to prayer: it is much easier
to pray – be it praise, repentance, petition
or any other kind of prayer – to relate
personally to God, when we are fasting than
when we have our stomach full and are totally
satisfied.
Fasting allows us, indeed, to vividly
experience the reality that God is our
greatest good, our treasure, what we most long
for. When we feel physical hunger we will more
easily be hungry for God, for his presence and
his power, and we will be able to live out the
truth that he is the only one who can truly
fill us and satisfy us. Moreover, by fasting
we are declaring with our bodies that what we
are interested in above all is being close to
the Lord.
Then the answer that Jesus gave to the devil
at the end of his fast in the desert, quoting
Deuteronomy 8:3, is fulfilled in us: “Man
shall not live by bread alone, but by every
word that comes from the mouth of God” (Mt.
4:4). That is why, precisely, fasting is
directly related not only to prayer, but also
to our feeding on the Word of God in
Scripture. It is also an expression of how
earnestly we are “seeking the face of the
Lord”.
2. Fasting
as a means of “afflicting the soul”
The Hebrew expression
“afflicting the soul” refers to humbling
ourselves. It is the opposite of “being puffed
up” or “becoming vain.” A person who has
everything material, or who is satisfied and
full after a banquet, will easily boast about
his abundance. “Afflicting the soul” is in a
certain way to mourn. Tthat is why parties and
banquets prevent us from “afflicting our
soul.” Thus, fasting is a practical way of
humbling ourselves, limiting ourselves and
putting ourselves in a situation of need.
Food is something necessary and good. It is
part of God’s creation and he provides it for
our sustenance and our joy. Thus, when we fast
we are not giving up something bad, but
depriving ourselves of something good,
something that we need.
In other words, fasting is becoming poor.
By doing without something that is necessary,
something to which we are entitled, we are
making ourselves needy before God. We
are presenting ourselves before him
empty-handed, in poverty. We recognize
ourselves as in need of him, hungry for
him. And this is nothing less than being
“poor in spirit” –recognizing ourselves as
poor, recognizing that we cannot attain
blessedness by our own means, that the power
to save us is not in our own hands. And these
poor in spirit, Jesus says, are blessed
because “theirs is the kingdom of heaven” (Mt.
5:3). When we recognize ourselves as poor and
limited before God, we open ourselves to the
blessing, the salvation and the happiness he
has for us.
3. Fasting
and spiritual sensitivity
If much food easily makes
us sluggish and distracts us (cf. Luke 21:34),
being deprived of it through fasting may help
us to be more sensitive and alert to spiritual
realities: the presence of God and his power,
the message of his Word, the guidance of the
Spirit. Hence it is possible that, when we are
fasting, some gifts of the Spirit (like
discernment) may become more intense or
manifest themselves more easily.
That is why the Desert Fathers saw fasting as
one of the main ways of “vigilance,” of
watching before the Lord, as Jesus commands us
in the Gospel (Mt. 24:42-44). Much food makes
us drowsy. Fasting helps us to stay awake and
be ready for the Lord’s action. This is the
reason why fasting is recommended to those who
are about to be baptized as adults or who are
being prepared for confirmation.
4. Fasting,
prayer and sacrifice
Fasting in a certain way is prayer. It amounts
to making our whole body participate in prayer
by presenting it empty, poor and needy before
God. It is precisely because we are unified
beings (we are not a soul “locked” into a
body-prison or a body-shell, but a unified
being consisting of body and soul, a material
element and a spiritual one,) that our body
“participates” in prayer. Prayer is not
something exclusively mental or interior –
prayer belongs to the whole human being. In
the same way, when we pray we stand or kneel,
raise our hands or fold them, close our eyes,
sing.
In the case of fasting, it is the whole body
that is entering into prayer. Fasting is
taking prayer to a corporal level, showing
that our prayer is so “serious” that we come
to it with our whole being, that we are able
to go “from words to deeds”.
We thus arrive at a correct understanding of
fasting as sacrifice. These days, many
Christians have the idea that a sacrifice
involves, first of all, denying themselves
something instead of enjoying it, or even
having that deprivation cause pain. But
sacrifices in the Old Testament were not so
much things that people would deny themselves
of, but mainly things people offered or
delivered to God as a gift of worship to
him.
A frequent event nowadays might help us
understand this. When political leaders or a
heads of state visit another country they
often place a wreath, a “floral offering,” if
you will, at a monument that has a special
significance for the country being visited. By
doing so they arenot “depriving” themselves of
anything but giving a gift as a way of recognizing
and honoring the value or the importance
of that monument and, therefore, of the host
country itself. Similarly, presenting a sacrifice
or an offering to God is a way of
recognizing him and honoring him as God, in
other words, worshiping him. (Of
course, when people would “give” an ox or a
sheep to God in sacrifice, the animals would
have to be killed, or when they “gave” him an
offering of wine they poured it out as a
libation, because that was the way of saying
that they were renouncing their own use of
these things and giving them over to the Lord,
consecrating them to him. In that sense they
were “depriving” themselves of them. But the
main thing about a sacrifice is not the
deprivation itself, nor the suffering that may
cause, but the giving or the dedication/consecration.)
We can then see that sacrifice, in the
biblical sense, has a positive dimension. It
is giving more than it is taking
away.
In the New Covenant, only the sacrifice of
Christ gathers all the Old Testament
sacrifices in itself, surpasses them and
abolishes them, as is explained at length in
the letter to the Hebrews. This unique
sacrifice is the maximum and definitive
expression of worship to God, which all
Christians join ourselves to as the body of
Christ we are. But precisely because of that
union with Christ, the New Testament claims
that we too, in our worship to God, “offer
spiritual sacrifices” (1 Pet 2:5). The letter
to the Hebrews mentions two examples of such
sacrifices: our praise, and sharing what we
have with others (Heb. 13:15-16).
In addition, Paul tells us that the authentic
or “spiritual” worship we must offer to God is
to “present our bodies as a living sacrifice”
(Rom. 12:1). Even though it is possible that
by “body” he means our whole being, it is
precisely about our whole being because it
encompasses our physical body. We would be
stretching the text too much if we said that
Paul is specifically referring to fasting. But
at the same time, if fasting is something we
do with our body, it is a concrete expression
of this authentic worship in which we present
our body and our being before God.
5. A form
of intercession
Because of its strong connection with prayer,
fasting can specifically be a form of
intercession. Some Christians believe that
even during the times of the day when they are
not praying, our body, in fasting,
continues the prayer: it is like an ongoing
intercession, not with words nor with the mind
but with the body that is being “presented to
God” as an offering.
That is why we could say we are fasting “for”
a given need or petition that we are bringing
before God. Fasting to intercede could be a
way to make our intercession more intense,
serious and complete before God.
6.
“Fighting against the passions”
As we have said, fasting is depriving
ourselves of something necessary and good –
food. In order to fast, we must exercise
willpower, because what we would
“instinctively” or by nature do is eat.
Fasting is a decision that requires
self-control, but it doesn’t just require it –
it exercises it. By controlling ourselves in
something that is natural and good (the desire
to eat, hunger,) our character is strengthened
and we acquire more self-control in general.
Self-control, let us recall, is part of the
fruit of the Holy Spirit in our lives (Gal.
5:22-23) – that is to say, it’s part of mature
Christian character.
Therefore, fasting is a way in which we learn
to control all those other desires which are
not good. It is a way to defeat our
inclination towards evil and overcome
temptation. It is, in that sense, a “spiritual
exercise,” a “discipline.”
7.
Spiritual Warfare
Precisely because fasting strengthens our
Christian character, it equips us to face the
enemy’s wiles and temptations. It is, then, a
weapon of Christian warfare against Satan.
That is why fasting is associated with
exorcism (Mk. 9:29, in some versions); that is
why fasting is one of the typical practices
for Lent, when we intensify the Christian
warfare against all the manifestations of evil
in our life.
Some practical instructions
on fasting
Like many other traditional Christian
practices, fasting declined much in Western
societies from the times of the Enlightenment
(18th century,) and was impacted, of course,
by the resulting secularization and
de-Christianization of society. This caused
many good Christians to stop fasting, or never
to learn how to do it, because they could not
find persuasive reasons to do so.
The modern emphasis on the “horizontal
dimension” that I spoke about the beginning of
the article has emerged in modern times as the
only valid reason many would accept for
fasting, not taking into account the spiritual
meaning I have presented here.
In the specific case of the Catholic Church
(the tradition I know best) its requirements
concerning fasting were loosened greatly
around the time of the Second Vatican Council
(1962-1965), largely with the intention of
facilitating the participation of the faithful
in the liturgy and their experience of
conversion in a deeper sense, in the midst of
modern society. Even though that intention had
some good in it, its negative result has been
the almost complete disappearance of fasting
as a spiritual discipline amongst Latin rite
Catholics. The Catholic Church’s precept on
fasting is still in force (although only for
Ash Wednesday and Good Friday,) but the norm
is extremely lax, since it describes fasting
as having three meals during the day, only one
of which is to be “a main meal” (a non-defined
term) and such that the other two together are
smaller than the main meal; and not eating
anything in between meals. In my estimation,
it qualifies as a “light fast.” On top of
that, many Catholics, not understanding the
meaning of fasting, limit themselves to doing
the minimum required to obey the norm. Other
Christian traditions may practice fasting with
more rigor.
The relaxed definition of fasting from food
encourages people to “fast” from (deprive
themselves of) other things that are not food
– smoking, drinking alcohol, eating sweets,
going to the movies, watching too much
television, etc. As a result, many people do
not fast from food itself but deprive
themselves of these other things. Those forms
of self-denial are often admirable and can
certainly have their place in the Christian
life, and they can help in self-control. They
are related to fasting and share some of its
spiritual meaning, but are not in themselves
fasting or a replacement for an actual fast.
Here are some ways of fasting that can, in
general, be practiced in the circumstances of
modern life.
1. “Normal”
or “basic” fasting
This, I would recommend, be a fast for one
day. It can be repeated over several days, but
always with a meal at the end of each day. It
consists of the following:
- The day before, meals must be
normal; dinner must not be too abundant (not
“filling up” the day before in order to
endure the fast).
- Do not have breakfast or lunch; you can
drink something at those times.
- Eat dinner in the evening, but a rather
light dinner (if not, it may cause
indigestion; and it is also not the case
that we want to fill ourselves up to
compensate for having fasted).
- Do not eat between meals; you can drink
water or other liquids.
2.
The “half-fast” or half-day fast
This is a milder version of the previous one:
- Normal meals the day before.
- No breakfast; you may drink something.
- Eat lunch normally, that is, break the
fast at noon.
- Do not eat between breakfast and lunch;
water or other liquids may be drunk.
3.
Mild fast
- Normal meals the day before.
- Do not eat breakfast or lunch, but at
those times (or at one of them,) in addition
to drinking, you may eat something small
like a piece of bread, a fruit or some
salad.
- Eat dinner in the evening.
- Do not eat between meals; water or other
liquids may be drunk.
4.
Bread-and-Water fast
This form of fasting was quite common among
Christians in former times. It is stricter
than the “normal” one and can be very helpful
when fasting for two or more days.
- Normal meals the day before.
- Do not eat breakfast, lunch or dinner, but
only a piece of bread and some water at
those three times.
- Do not eat in between meal times; water
may be taken.
Many Christians, if they do a “normal” fast,
do it for one day. If they decide to take on a
stricter fast, they may repeat the “normal”
fast over many days or (if they are
experienced) do the “bread and water” fast. It
is also possible to combine in a week one day
of “normal” fasting (e.g. Wednesdays and
Fridays are traditional fasting days) with a
“moderate” fast or a “half-day” fast the
remaining days (except Sunday. Christian
tradition indicates that one does not fast on
Sundays, not even during Lent, with the
exception, at least in my tradition, of
fasting before taking Communion. Sunday, the
Lord’s Day, is the day when “the Bridegroom is
with them” and is a feast day.)
For the Christian practice of
fasting, here are some guidelines:
- In order to care for your own
health, do not stop drinking water on fast
days. Dehydration is very dangerous.
- Do not “feast” before a fast nor at the
time of breaking it; not only would this
take away its meaning but it may cause
physical problems.
- Small children and sick people must not do
a “normal” fast. Older people should only
fast if they are capable of doing it. These
people, if they are to fast, can do it in a
reduced way, like the “moderate” fast or the
“half-day” fast described above.
- The same applies to people whose health
condition prevents them from spending many
hours without eating, as is the case with
some types of diabetes.
- Someone who has never practiced fasting or
who has practiced it only a little should
not venture into suddenly fasting for more
than one day. Even more, a fast like that
should only be undertaken for serious
spiritual reasons, after having discerned
(hopefully with advice from other people,
and especially from a wise spiritual
advisor) that it is the right thing to do,
for a special reason, in order to further
spiritual growth.
- In the practice of fasting in its various
forms, each person must find what works best
for their physical condition and their age,
and what is most fruitful in their Christian
life.
Fasting has been an immensely valuable
discipline in the whole biblical and Christian
history. Today’s Christians can recover its
meaning and its practice, always seeking “the
fast that the Lord chooses” (Is 58:6-10), that
is, a consistent Christian life and not merely
external practices. If we do so, we will
discover the great fruit fasting can bear in
our Christian growth, in our personal
relationship with God and in our communion
with the rest of the Christian people.
* * *
NOTES:
1) Leo the Great (fifth century): “May our
fasting contribute to the relief of the
needy. No sacrifice by the believers is
more acceptable to the Lord than one the
poor can benefit from” (Sermon 48,
5; PL 54:300). Similar ideas might perhaps
be found in other Fathers.
2) The Didache or “The Teaching of
the Twelve Apostles” is the most ancient
non-biblical Christian writing; it dates
probably from the late first century or
the middle of the second.
Carlos
Alonso Vargas is a coordinator of the Arbol
de Vida community in San
Jose, Costa Rica and a former president of
the Sword
of the Spirit. Adapted from “Un discípulo en camino.”
Photo in the public domain. |